Hi - this is Srinivasan Sampathkumar from Triplicane. I have a passion for Marine Insurance, Cricket and of course Temples especially Thiruvallikkeni.
From Sept 2009, I am posting my thoughts in this blog ; From July 2010, my postings on Temples & Tamil are on my other blog titled "Kairavini Karayinile " (www.tamil.sampspeak.in)
Request you to keep providing your feedback which will help me improve and present better.

Monday, September 5, 2016

Anakaputhur is a
suburb of Chennai ~ nearer Pallavaram, Thiruneermalai. The Maduravoyal by-pass runs over it. Anakaputhur
lies a little beyond the international airport on the banks of the Adyar river,
that originates near Manimangalam
village by Chembarambakkam lake and weaves through three
districts—Kancheepuram, Tiruvallur and Chennai—before culminating the nearly
43km long journey into the Bay of Bengal. Like the Cooum river, the Adyar flows
through Chennai, carrying away the sewage and effluence that the city spews
into it.

Anakaputhur was once famous for
its traditional weaving business, which has declined due to modern competition.
In Aug 2015, at the Centenary Auditorium
of the University of Madras, Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modiji attended the first National Handloom Day
celebrations and unveiled a logo for the handloom sector. The significance of
the date, as mentioned in his speech on the occasion, was the launch of the
Swadeshi movement on this day in 1905 as a call for boycott of imported
textiles.

Among the
tributes presented to the prime minister on this occasion was a shawl woven
using 25 types of natural fibre, including one from the banana stem, made by
the Anakaputhur Jute Weavers Association (AJWA). Livemint on that occasion reported that Anakaputhur
was once a weavers’ village, one of many that produced plaid-inspired checked
fabric, mainly for export. The Real Madras Handkerchief that was woven here has
a history with close links to the slave trade. As a drape, it was popular in
Africa, especially Nigeria, but since the coup in 1966 and the subsequent civil
war, the demand for Madras Handkerchiefs also came down. Madras checks,
sometimes simply known as “Madras”, became popular in the US. Now in Anakaputhur, the difference is stark. C. Sekar, a
third-generation weaver who heads the AJWA, says that while there were
5,000-odd handlooms 25 years ago, there are only about 350 today. About 70% of
the weavers make lungi fabric; the rest are weavers of silk-cotton sarees and
those, like Sekar, who weave using natural fibre. Sekar is famous in these
parts and brings together about 12 women’s self-help groups under the banner of
the AJWA to extract banana stem fibre, turn it into yarn and weave yardage and
sarees. At Sekar’s home in Anakaputhur, every inch of floor space in what would
otherwise be a living room has been taken up by four pit looms, their teeming
heddles and a spinning wheel fashioned from a bicycle wheel frame on which
Sekar’s wife spins the yarn onto a bobbin. There is barely enough space for a
single person to pass between the clacking looms, so we sit outside, on the
thinnai or verandah reserved for visitors.

Pic credit : livemint

The process
of weaving banana fibre fabric begins with sourcing the pseudostem of the
banana tree. India is one of the foremost banana cultivators in the world and
Tamil Nadu is one of the leading producers in the country. The sheaths of the
banana stem are waste by-products sourced from the markets of Chennai or from
wholesalers in places like Kundrathur, which lies just across the river from
Anakaputhur. In the year since the
first National Handloom Day celebrations, Anakaputhur’s weaving community has
also faced setbacks in the form of flooding of the Adyar river in December
2015, which not only destroyed the banana crop upstream but also damaged raw
processed fibre, dyes and looms in Anakaputhur. For full article : Anakaputtur - Live Mint

Sunday 4th Sept, the Hindu carried an article titled ‘With
monsoon not far away, is Chennai ready ? ~
the residents of the city are unlikely to forget the first few days of
December 2015. What started with overcast skies and rains, on December 1,
turned out to be a nightmare, and heralded the floods that were arguably one of
the worst in living memory. The rains, which lashed through the day, left in
their wake a battered city with several areas that went under. Several lives
were lost, thousands were displaced, stranded and had to be evacuated with
boats and choppers, the loss of property ran to many crores of rupees, and
normalcy was not restored until weeks later in many parts of the city.

The release of water from the Chembarambakkam reservoir, as well
as what the government called “unprecedented rainfall not seen in a 100 years”
completed the destruction. Nine months later, while many still remember the
heroic rescue efforts which were mounted to bring the city back on its feet,
the question on everyone’s mind is whether the city is prepared to face the
northeast monsoon this year. Given how even a few hours of rain over the past
few days (spilling over from the southwest monsoon) have caused substantial
flooding, any consideration of the monsoon months in Chennai only brings a
sinking feeling. Over the last two weeks, the city has come alive on social media,
raucously wondering how the spell of rain that the city has received has
crippled it what it bodes for the coming months.

Of the 5 photos that the article had, this one drew my attention
– have seen this in person .. and here is one from my post in Dec 2015, about
SYMA’s role in Chennai floods.

Rain has been unrelenting ~ there was so much of it on 23rd– and yesterday too [1stDec 2015 ] there was heavy
rain – it rained continuously. Record-shattering torrential
rains brought Chennai to its knees on Wednesday as widespread flooding shut
down the airport and factories of top automobile companies, while trains packed
with passengers were rendered immobile on submerged tracks. Today, the
rain relented a little by afternoon but a drizzle under overcast skies
continued amid reports of rising water level in many parts of the state capital
as well as its adjoining districts.

The city remained off limits as cars, trucks and buses
could not enter or go out of it. Several feet of water blocked most of its main
roads and dangerous sink holes appeared on many streets. Some reports put
that more than a lakh of people have been driven away from their homes as a 100
year old record of one day’s rainfall covering a month’s average, was virtually
broken.

Triplicane, fortunately is not affected. Today
Thiruvallikkeni buzzed with activity. Srinivas Youngmens Association
[SYMA] organised relief work. We organised sets of raincoats for
Corporation workers [must place on record the great work they are doing in many
parts of the city]. We arranged a mini-truck, carried relief material
including mats, new blankets, new sarees, rice bags and food packets.
Friends of Thennacharya Sri Padham Thangi Sabha also distributed food packets
at many places. They joined with SYMA and handed over 200 food
packets. We planned to handover the materials to Seva Barathi at Tambaram
and travelled via Poonamallee High Road, Maduravoyal bridge.

There was water, water and more …. On way saw river in
spates and water flowing on roads in some places. Could not move beyond
Thiruneermalai and were forced to return back – distributing food on the
way. At Anakaputhur, it was a pathetic sight – people at housetops –
water running like a small river – marooned, we could not move them out –
but provided them food, blanket, mats – passing them through rope. We
finally distributed the relief material at Maduravoyil Govt High School and
returned home.